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Lasting Behavior Change Achieve positive behavior change in yourself and others

Lasting Behavior Change Achieve positive behavior change in yourself and others. Making change that sticks. Virtual Meeting Mark Clare New Value Streams Consulting mark.k.clare@gmail.com 260-433-7923. Your host. The Promise. Goal. Specifics. Straight forward to use Inexpensive

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Lasting Behavior Change Achieve positive behavior change in yourself and others

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  1. Lasting Behavior ChangeAchieve positive behavior change in yourself and others Making change that sticks Virtual Meeting Mark Clare New Value Streams Consulting mark.k.clare@gmail.com 260-433-7923 Your host

  2. The Promise Goal Specifics Straight forward to use Inexpensive Grounded in science Based on proven practice Works on all challenges with the exception of those involving clinical or mental health disorders • Learn to apply a reliable process for making behavior change that sticks in yourself and others. LBC = Lasting Behavior Change

  3. Example Behavior Change ChallengesPersonal and Professional • Weight • Stress • Exercise • Money • Health • Relationships • Sleep • Self Improvement • Teacher • Engage students and avoid disruptive classroom behaviors • Manager • Motivate employees to try new ways of working • Doctor • Coach patients to make health behavior changes • Parent • Get kids to listen, take responsible actions and learn

  4. ApproachDistill the Lessons Learned from the Latest Science • Target simple but vital behaviors • Motivate change by appealing to both heart and mind but mostly heart • People automatically adapt to changes in the environment so change the environment • People change people so look to networks, groups, friends and family members • Behavior change is an experimental process of learning from experience.

  5. ApproachDefine a process for applying the lessons to everyday situations Learning from experience is the flywheel for behavior change

  6. Lesson One 1. Target Simple Vital Behaviors2. Motivate From the Heart3. Change Environment4. Work Through Others5. Systematically Experiment

  7. Target Simple Vital Behaviors • Break your improvement goal into simple behaviors • Easy to confuse behaviors with outcomes or tasks • Need to specify behaviors to stop, start and avoid starting • Translate target behaviors into small steps that lead toward your goal Behaviors? • Speak clearly • Collaborate • Lose 20 lbs. • Get the mail • Have empathy • Don’t text and drive "A goal properly set is halfway reached.“ ZigZiglar

  8. Target Simple Vital Behaviors • To find simple behaviors use the 3-hows or ask how can I do that 3 times in a row • Start: Be more empathetic • How can I do that? • HOW1: Listen carefully when someone is speaking • How can I do that? • HOW2: Focus on what they are saying • How can I do that? • HOW3: Watch their face and take notes Two simple behaviors!

  9. Target Simple Vital Behaviors • Vital behaviors are those that are most important for achieving the change goal • Practiced by the best and not by lesser performers • Quick research then through your own experience What behaviors are vital for providing good customer service? How about losing weight?

  10. Target Simple Vital Behaviors • Stop Doing X • Old habit to unlearn • Start Doing Y • New habit to learn • Avoid Starting Z • Unwanted compensating behaviors • Work arounds • New bad habits Habits are behaviors we do automatically. Learning new habits is how we make behavior change stick

  11. Take Small Steps to Get StartedContinue to define smaller and smaller steps until you are motivated to act Personal Professional Goal: Employee empathy Behavior to start: listen during emotional outburst Small step: Assume customer has right to be angry Smaller step: Recall a time when you received similar service and got mad Behavior to avoid starting: Getting angry or bad mouthing the organization • Goal: Lose weight • Behavior to start: Eat reduced portions of high calorie foods • Small step: Order small rather than large fry • Smaller step: Leave two fries in the box • Behavior to avoid starting: Having sugary snack mid-afternoon Smaller steps require less effort & motivation

  12. Guidelines • Use 3-hows to get to specific behavior • Make steps smaller and smaller until there is clear motivation for doing it • Look to what others have discovered • Quick research • Ask people that have made the change • Is this the fastest way I can get started? • Label behaviors and small steps in a meaningful way • Play to your strengths • Formulate behavior to try as if then rule Search iTunes or the App store for NewHabits or use link below https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/new-habits/id604403553?mt=8

  13. Practice Pick an improvement goal Use the 3-hows to find a simple behavior Define one small step you are motivated to take Try it out! Consider labeling or play to your strength in step three

  14. Lesson Two 1. Target Simple Vital Behaviors2. Motivate Change by Appealing to Both Heart and Mind but Mostly Heart3. Change Environment4. Work Through Others5. Systematically Experiments

  15. We are of Two Minds The Rider The Elephant Emotional Automatic Hot • Rational • Conscious • Cool Watchful, thinking, and self controlled. In the moment, runs on gut, powerful & impulsive. “Learning how to train the elephant is the secret of self-improvement.”

  16. The Logic of the Heart • You don’t train the elephant with reason but with the logic of the heart • Follow the feel-goods • Protect and expand sense of identity • Seek pleasure avoid pain • Emphasize immediate gains over future gains • 100+ cognitive biases that reveal details of automatic thinking

  17. The Logic of the Heart • To uncover the logic of the heart use the 3-Whys or ask why three times in a row • Why don’t I/they already practice the target behavior? • Why don’t you exercise regularly every week? • WHY1: I don’t have the time • Why don’t you have the time? • WHY2: I am busy with work and family • Why are you busy with work and family? • WHY3: They are more important than exercise Emphasize immediate over future.

  18. Define Small Steps Usingthe Logic of the Heart • Use the 3-Why to understand what is standing in the way of starting or stopping the target behavior and define small steps to work around it. • Define small steps that: • Avoid pain and create pleasure or some feel-good • Leverage pride, values and personal stature • Provide immediate rewards but also generate long-term benefits • You likely won’t figure the elephant out right away so keep notes on the Whys and the small steps you try out and how well they work Examples Take a walk with family after dinner Set a 10,000 step goal with peers at work

  19. Don’t Forget The Rider • Sometimes lack of skill or lack of confidence to gain a skill blocks behavior change • I don’t know how to do that • I won’t be able to do that • Trying that is too risky in my environment • Identify skills and techniques needed to enact the vital behaviors • Quick research • Observe people that have made the change • Take small steps to practice techniques Behaviors change when we satisfy both the elephant and the rider. The rider demands a clear meaningful goal and the belief that they have or can acquire the skills needed to reach the goal.

  20. Guidelines • If behaviors are not changing it is a skill (rider) or motivation (elephant) issue • Positive affirmations work • Link change goals directly to: • Values • Moral imperative or ethical issues • Larger purpose • Fun or pleasurable • Personalize consequences of inaction • Create a positive penalty for inaction • Examine self talk about change • List fears and other emotions that are blocking action https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/new-habits/id604403553?mt=8

  21. Practice Pick an improvement goal Use the 3-hows to find a simple behavior Use the 3-whys to determine why the behaviors are not already practiced Focus on a motivation issue Use the logic of the heart to define one or more small steps to enact the behavior Try them out! • The Logic of the Heart • Follow the feel-goods • Protect and expand sense of identity • Seek pleasure avoid pain • Emphasize immediate gains over future gains

  22. Lesson Three 1. Target Simple Vital Behaviors2. Motivate From the Heart3. People Automatically Adapt to Changes in the Environment so Change the Environment4. Work Through Others5. Systematically Experiment

  23. Change the Environment • Small changes to the environment can be a quick and easy way to produce big and lasting behavior changes • School cafeteria • An order wheel • Disposable latex gloves • 100+ cognitive biases that reveal details of automatic thinking The elephant takes it cues from the environment. Change the cues and retrain the elephant.

  24. Change Environment • Identify enablers and defeaters • Enablers makes it easy to enact the new behaviors • Defeaters makes it hard to enact the new behaviors • Generate ideas to strengthen enablers and weaken defeaters • Hard stops make it impossible to do things in the old way • Nudges promote the new behavior but leaves options open How do I change the environment to promote new behaviors and block unwanted behaviors?

  25. Example: Weight Loss • Defeater: See treats every time you enter kitchen • Nudge • Move treats out of site • Hard stop • Dispose of treats and don’t buy more • Enabler: More water less soda • Nudge • Put plenty of water in your fridge and push soda to the back • Hard stop • Stock only water This works for personal change and when you want to influence behavior change in others.

  26. Guidelines • Move things around, get rid of things that trigger old habits, buy things that promote new behaviors • Set defaults to support new behaviors • Use notes, reminders, alarms and other forms of information • Reduce steps and time it takes to start new behavior • Keep score and reward yourself BUT not by indulging in the behavior you want to stop https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/new-habits/id604403553?mt=8

  27. Practice Pick an improvement goal Use the 3-hows to find a simple behavior Identify one defeater and one enabler Define a way to weaken the defeater & strengthen the enabler Implement them! • Enablers make it easier to start the new behaviors and defeaters make it hard. • Consider both a nudge and a hard stop in step four.

  28. Lesson Four 1. Target Simple Vital Behaviors2. Motivate From the Heart3. Change Environment4. People Change People so Look to Networks, Groups, Friends & Family Members5. Systematically Experiment

  29. Social by Nature • Brain is hardwired to be part of group • Strong psychological need to be included, respected, loved and needed • Strongly influenced by the individuals and groups we associate with • Behavioral mimicry “The most fundamental discovery of this new science: We are wired to connect..” Daniel Goleman

  30. Method • Identify individuals and groups that • will naturally support the change • may tend to resist or even sabotage the change • Define ways to link with supporters and manage detractors • Identify moments of truth and how to get help • Turn detractors into supporters • Determine if new relationships are necessary to achieve change goal • Change support groups • Professional help Often simplified into the principle of peer pressure, the idea is you can influence behavior change in people through other people that have influence with them.

  31. Example – Kids and Physical Activity • Supporters • Teachers, active students at school • Potential detractors • Sedentary friends, sedentary family members • Moment of truth • Hanging out with sedentary friends after school • Manage potential detractors • Buy Wii and host a play session with sedentary gamer friends This approach includes both working with others and change the environment.

  32. Guidelines • Make a promise to someone important • Announce change goal publically • Look to others that have already achieved the goal • Get a sponsor • Find an online community • Form informal support group https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/new-habits/id604403553?mt=8

  33. Practice Pick an improvement goal Use the 3-hows to find a simple behavior Identify support and potential detractor relationships Define a way to manage detractors & get help from supporters Implement them! • Supporters provide motivation, energy and advice for reaching the change goal • Detractors discourage or even work again progress towards the change goal

  34. Lesson Five 1. Target Simple Vital Behaviors2. Motivate From the Heart3. Change Environment4. Work Through Others5. Behavior Change is an Experimental Process of Learning From Experience

  35. Learning Agenda The first four lesson tell us what we need to learn to create lasting behavior change. The fifth lesson tell us we need to take a systematic and persistent approach to learning what works for us. • Target simple but vital behaviors • Behaviors to stop, start and avoid to reach the change goal? • Motivate change by appealing to both heart and mind but mostly heart • How to leverage the logic of the heart? • What skills are need to enact the new behaviors? • People automatically adapt to changes in the environment so change the environment • How to leverage enablers and manage defeaters? • People change people so look to networks, groups, friends and family members • How to leverage supporters and manage detractors?

  36. Learn From ExperienceA four-step process that repeats until we find techniques that work and stick Learning from experience is the flywheel for behavior change

  37. Set the Stage and GO! • Start with behavior that is clearly linked to the change goal • Pick a technique for making the change that is proven to work • Start with a small step that you or others are motivated to take • Take a few minutes in the morning to identify times you can try the small step during the day • Pick something interesting or with little risk • Set a reminder to try it

  38. Observe the Results • Use all your senses • Make measurements • Read body language • Capture the data but also your thoughts and feelings • Document or record the results just after experience Want to sharpen your observation skills? https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/new-habits/id604403553?mt=8

  39. Interpret the Results • Did it work? • Don’t over generalize based on one measurement or experience • Think in terms of cause and effect • Get to root cause using 3-whys • Special reasons or causes Want to sharpen your interpretation skills? https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/new-habits/id604403553?mt=8

  40. Change Approach? • If it worked do you need to keep doing it to form a habit? • If it did not work do you need to try: • It again under different circumstances? • Refinements or modest adjustments? • New technique? • New target behavior? • Be conservative and try a given technique/behavior several times before making changes • When you do fail and decide to change approach be sure you have a solid reason • If you decide to change approach go back to set the stage This is a critical decision! Don’t be too quick to change your approach. We are trying to learn from experience and that can take several spins of the fly wheel

  41. Staying the Course • Failed attempts reveal what to try next • Get something out of every try • Small steps add up to significant change over time • Take time to manage motivation and willpower Want to boost motivation and willpower? https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/new-habits/id604403553?mt=8

  42. Learn From ExperienceA four-step process that repeats until we find techniques that work and stick Click for larger version Learning from experience is the flywheel for behavior change

  43. Change Goal = Weight Loss NO

  44. Guidelines • Break a big change goal down into specific behaviors and small steps • Learn from others – do quick research and talk to others that have successfully made change • Take a deliberate approach to learning from experience and actively observe and interpret • Document findings and ideas. Take pictures and keep a journal • Try things daily or regularly and in a variety of circumstances • Make sure you gain insights, have fun and earn points along the way • Get better at learning from experience by sharpening the underlying skills https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/new-habits/id604403553?mt=8

  45. Practice Pick a change goal Set the stage Complete three cycles through the process Document your results What’s next? This is your opportunity to apply all five lessons learned to make real change. Use the document Behavior Change Pathway to guide your work.

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